Based on a memoir, 'Vow' comes in a lightweight package. With a cast that is appealing and characters that were charismatic to the extent that you care about them through the film, 'Vow' is like a WinRAR file, an in truth bigger stuff compressed to a smaller file size--the rise of an underrated drama.
A dreamy life was ahead of the couple: Leo and Paige (a masculine studio owner, Channing Tatum and a luscious Rachel McAdams), until under the candled with light posts winter night, while in the back seat, they get rear-ended by a truck. He remains okay but she flashes out the memories of the last handful of years involuntarily. She doesn't recognize Leo, and was shocked to learn that Obama is the new president. Leo devotes his life to get back Paige's love.
Mr. Tatum seemed to be a better actor if playing a medieval warrior (Eagle) and fiendish soldiers (G.I. Joe - Rise of Cobra) than being a voice-over narrator muttering: 'Moments of impact define who we are' which is in all honesty strikes if a better voice-over was done. One wouldn't, of certainty, like the status, in the society of the two leads. They both got good life on track and they are already stepped on it from the start--Leo is a recording studio owner and Paige is a talented sculptor. If we want realism, then a stir of misery must be in the mix. There is, however, a subtle naturalism in the event that Leo devotes his life to help Paige remember their past of great love. As alumni of the Sparks' page-to-screen movie chain, Tatum and McAdams proved their skills. However at some point, they might not be the real jeopardizers, their past films tend to insult Nicholas Sparks' gift of genuine emotional frenzy of words. In this movie, they are fine. McAdams' confusion gave profit to the movie more than I realized. 'Inspired by true events', the real-life Leo and Paige pops on the scene that heighten the emotion even more.
'Vow' is a treasure that is worth of more value. It holds a surge of emotions that seldom hands off. If this was because of McAdams or my intense interest in these memoir-based films, then I won't regret.
For Better and FORgetting: 'The Vow'
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